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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    TUNE of the WEEK 

     Standard Notation and Chords

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    CONTENTS 

     1: Cenneag Mhor ..................................... 1 2: Mo Chaillein Dileas Donn .................. 1 3: Johnny Murray of Lochee ................... 1 4: Ray’s Classic ....................................... 2

     5: Joan’s Jig ............................................ 26: Little Diamond ...................................27: Jenny Lind Polka ................................ 38: Cro Cinn T-Saile ..................................39: Cavehill ...............................................4 10: Banbury Bill ..................................... 4

     11: My Beautiful Mandolin Friend ..........4 13: Pretty Little Cat ................................. 5  12: Wi My Dog and Gun ..........................6 14: Periwig, The ...................................... 7  15: Drummond Castle ............................. 7  16: Yow Cam to Wir Door Yarmin .......... 7 

     17: New Five Cents, The ..........................8 18a: Hoch Hey Johnnie Lad ....................8 18b: Lord Drummond .............................9 19: Wistfulness at Wiston ....................... 9 20: I Bhi Ada ......................................... 10

    TUNE of the WEEK 

    Nigel Gatherer’s Tune of the Week, Book 1 • First published January 2012Compiled, designed and produced by Nigel Gatherer

    All transcriptions by Nigel Gatherer, © Nigel Gatherer 2012

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

     1: Cenneag Mhor   (traditional)

    I transcribed this tune from my record collection, from one of my favourite Scottish dance bands, Addie Harper’s Wick SCD

    Band. I don’t really know anything about the tune, but I like it. It’s in a D pentatonic key, and fairly lilts along.

     2: Mo Chaillein Dileas Donn  (traditional)

    I learned this slow air from a recording by the folk group Ossian from Glasgow. It’s a fairly well known Gaelic song

    I learned this tune from ddler Clare McLaughlin of Deaf Shepherd. I think it’s a variant of a bagpipe tune.

     3: Johnny Murray of Lochee  (unknown)

    1

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

     4: Ray’s Classic  (Willie Hunter)

    This is played in Ireland as “The Race Classic”, and some assume it’s a polka from the south of Ireland. However, it was

    composed by the Shetland ddler Willie Hunter, and called “Ray’s Classic” to commemorate a car. I have also heard it

    called “Roy’s Session”.

    This tune is from Northumbria and was composed by Henry Clough, father of the celebrated Northumbrian piper Tom

    Clough. I notated it from the playing of Kathryn Tickell.

     5: Joan’s Jig  (Henry Clough)

    6: Little Diamond   (traditional)

    2

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    I learned this tune from ace ddler Clare McLaughlin. It’s an Irish polka, possibly from the Coleman era.

    I rst learned the Jenny Lind Polka from Alastair Anderson’s wonderful album “Concertina Workshop” (1972). The tune

    was very popular at one time, and was named after a famous Swedish opera singer, who was also known as The Swedish

    Nightingale.

    7: Jenny Lind Polka 

    (traditional)

     A lovely slow tune from the playing of Alison Kinnaird. The tune is also called “The Cattle Fold of Kintail”, or “The Kintail Lullaby”.

    8: Cro Cinn T-Saile 

    (traditional)

    3

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    “The Cave Hill dominates the skyline on the northern edge of Belfast...” I don’t know anything about this tune. I got it from

    Kerr’s Merry Melodies (c1875).

    9: Cavehill   (traditional)

    I learned this English tune from a Dave Swarbrick record, and I’ve always liked it. I think it’s a Morris dance tune.

     10: Banbury Bill   (traditional)

     11: My Beautiful Mandolin Friend  

    (Gatherer)

    4

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    Composed in honour of my friend, mandolinist extrordinaire Alison Stephens, who died in October 2010.

     13: Pretty Little Cat   (traditional)

    This is an American Old-Time tune which I learned from a French musician called Cathy Castet. Recently she told me she’d

    got the name wrong, but I guess I’m stuck with this title.

    5

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    From the playing of the Edinburgh folk group Silly Wizard, from the 1970s.

     12: Wi’ My Dog and Gun (traditional)

    2. I said “Fair maid, do you know I love you?

    Tell me your name and your dwelling also?”

    “Oh, excuse my name, but you’ll nd my dwelling

    By the mountain streams where the moorcocks crow.”

    3. I said “Fair maid, if you wed a fermer,

    You’ll be tied for life tae one plot of land.

    I’m a rovin’ Johnny, if you gang wi’ me,

    You will have no ties, so gi’ me your hand.”

    4. “Ah, but if my parents knew I loved a rover,

    It is that I’m sure would be my overthrow,

    So I’ll stay at home for another seasonBy the mountain streams where the moorcocks crow.”

    5. “So it’s fare thee well, love; another season

    We will meet again in yon woodland vale,

     And I’ll set you down all upon my knee, love,

     And I’ll listen to your lovesick tale.

    6. “And it’s erm in erm we will go thegether

    Through the lofty trees, in the valley below,

    Where the linties sing their song sae sweetly

    By the mountain streams where the moorcocks crow.”

    6

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

     14: The Periwig  (traditional)

    I rst learned this tune from a recording of the folk group Ossian. It’s an old Scottish reel rst published in Capt Fraser’s

    “Airs and Melodies Peculiar to the Highlands and Isles of Scotland” (1815), where an anecdote is told of a Mr Fraser of

    Culduthel who, in the company of a venerable olf clergyman, couldn’t resist teasing him by tickling him under his large wig

    with a blade of corn. The minister, imagining an earwig or a spider rush to the re to shake his wig out; he lost hold of it and

    it fell in. Too fat to rescue it, it burned and almost suffocated the whole company. The “real” name of the tune is said to be

    “The Fry’d Periwig”.

     15: Drummond Castle 

    (traditional)

    This is a ne old Scottish jig. Note that you never play the F natural; this is a common feature in many tunes, and enables

    one to play in unusual keys on xed-key instruments such as the whistle. This tune is a jig version of the Strathspey

    “Cutting Ferns”. Drummond Castle is just outside Crieff in Perthshire.

     16: A Yow Cam to Wir Door Yarmin (trad)

    I got this tune from a Boys of the Lough

    recording. It’s a traditional Shetland ddle tune. 7

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

     17: The New Five Cents (traditional)

    Learned from a recording of American mandolinist Don Grieser.

     18a: Hoch Hey Johnnie Lad (traditional)

    Inspired by a recording of the Irish group Lunasa. They called it Jerry O’Sullivan’s. Its root is an old Scottish tune and song.

    8

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    Learned from a recording of The Tannahill Weavers, this old Scottish reel can also be found, in a slightly different setting, in

    Kerr’s Merry Melodies (c.1875).

     18b: Lord Drummond (traditional)

     19: Wistfulness at Wiston  (Nigel Gatherer)

    In 2011 I took part in a mandolin weekend residential at Wiston Lodge, Lanarkshire. The theme for the weekend was

    the “La Folia” structure which has been used in classical music for centuries. Since it doesn’t really feature in Scottishtraditional music, I composed this piece, which follows the chord progression of the “later Folia”.

    9

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

     20: I Bhi Ada  (traditional)

     A fairly well known tune, this is ther air to a “port a beul”, a Gaelic song used for dancing. This version is from accordionist

    John Carmichael.

    10

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    TUNE of the WEEK    11

     INDEX 

     Banbury Bill ...........................................4

    Cavehill ..................................................4

    Cenneag Mhor ........................................ 1

    Cro Cinn T-Saile ...................................... 3

     Drummond Castle .................................. 7 

     I Bhi Ada ............................................... 10

     Hoch Hey Johnnie Lad ...........................8 Jenny Lind Polka ....................................3

     Joan’s Jig ................................................ 2

     Johnny Murray of Lochee ...................... 1

     Little Diamond ....................................... 2

     Lord Drummond ..................................... 9

     Mo Chaillein Dileas Donn ...................... 1

     My Beautiful Mandolin Friend ...............4

     New Five Cents, The ...............................8

     Periwig, The ........................................... 7  Pretty Little Cat ...................................... 5 

     Ray’s Classic ........................................... 2

    Wi My Dog and Gun ...............................6

    Wistfulness at Wiston .............................9

    Yow Cam to Wir Door Yarmin ............... 7 

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    TUNE of the WEEK 

    TUNE of the WEEK 

     A selection of 21 tunes played anddiscussed at ‘The Gathering’,

     Nigel Gatherer’s on-line forum.